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A slow release nitrogen fertiliser produced by simultaneous granulation and superheated steam drying of urea with brown coal

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-05-09, 00:00 authored by M T Rose, E L Perkins, B K Saha, E C W Tang, T R Cavagnaro, W R Jackson, Karen HapgoodKaren Hapgood, A F A Hoadley, A F Patti
Background: The inefficient use of nitrogen (N) fertiliser as a consequence of N losses from soil is a pressing issue in broad-acre agricultural systems. The research reported here tested the hypothesis that granulation of synthetic N fertiliser (urea) with a natural organic C resource (brown coal) would reduce fertiliser N loss from the soil system. Results: Urea-enriched brown coal granules were simultaneously formed and dried within a pilot-scale superheated steam dryer. After application to unplanted soil columns, the urea-brown coal granules reduced nitrous oxide emission by up to 40 %, reduced mineral nitrogen leaching and maintained higher levels of N in topsoil when compared to conventional urea alone. Reduced gaseous N losses without a reduction in plant N uptake were also observed in planted soil columns treated with urea-brown coal granules. Conclusions: Brown coal-urea blended fertiliser showed potential for more efficient use of N in the long term and has environmental benefits in retaining more N in the soil.

History

Journal

Chemical and biological technologies in agriculture

Volume

3

Article number

10

Pagination

1 - 14

Publisher

SpringerOpen

Location

London, Eng.

eISSN

2196-5641

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Authors